During this step, your application will send a challenge to the device. The device will resolve this challenge by adding information and digitally signing the data.
The application will check the response from the device and get its credential ID. This ID will be used for further authentication requests.
To associate a device to a user, you need to instantiate a Webauthn\PublicKeyCredentialCreationOptions
object.
It will need:
The Relying Party
The User data
A challenge (random binary string)
A list of supported public key parameters i.e. an algorithm list (at least one)
Optionally, you can customize the following parameters:
A timeout
A list of public key credential to exclude from the registration process
The Authenticator Selection Criteria
Attestation conveyance preference
Extensions
Let’s see an example of the PublicKeyCredentialCreationOptions
object. The following example is a possible Public Key Creation page for a dummy user "@cypher-Angel-3000".
The options object can be converted into JSON and sent to the authenticator using the API.
It is important to store the user entity and the options object (e.g. in the session) for the next step. The data will be needed to check the response from the device.
You can change the default values for each and all options
The argument pubKeyCredParams
contains a list of Webauthn\PublicKeyCredentialParameters
objects that refer to COSE algorithms. The authenticators must use one of the algorithms in this list, respecting the order of preference on this list.
An empty list corresponds to the default algorithms that are ES256
and RS256
(in this order). Those two algorithms are required by the specification.
Customizing this list may lead to unexpected behavior. Please use with caution.
Please read detail on this page.
Please read detail on this page.
When the user already registered authenticators, you can pass a list of Webauthn\PublicKeyCredentialDescriptor
objects as argument to avoid registering multiple times the same authenticator.
What you receive must be a JSON object that looks like as follow:
There are two steps to perform with this object:
Now that all components are set, we can load the data we receive using the Serializer (variable $serializer
).
If no exception is thrown, you can go to the next step: the verification.
Now we have a fully loaded Public Key Credential object, but we need now to make sure that:
The authenticator response is of type AuthenticatorAttestationResponse
This response is valid.
The first step is easy to perform:
The second step is the verification against
The Public Key Creation Options we created earlier,
The URI host
The Authenticator Attestation Response Validator service (variable $authenticatorAttestationResponseValidator
) will check everything for you: challenge, origin, attestation statement and much more.
If no exception is thrown, the response is valid. You can store the Public Key Credential Source ($publicKeyCredentialSource
).
The way you store and associate these objects to the user is out of scope of this library. Please note that these objects implement \JsonSerializable
and have a static method createFromJson(string $json)
. This will allow you to serialize the objects into JSON and easily go back to an object.